I've always been curious as to what 5-HT2c contributes to the psychedelic experience with different drugs. Unlike 5-HT2a and 5-HT2b which are expressed throughout the body, I believe 5-HT2c is only expressed in the brain. I understand at least one possible function of 5-HT2c is to modulate dopamine transmission. From data I've seen, it appears that most psychedelic drugs that people enjoy taking have less affinity at 5-HT2c than 5-HT2a, generally. (Caveat: Testing different receptors means using different assays, and assays are notoriously inconsistent between each other---hence it can be difficult to compare affinities between receptor types if they are of similar order of magnitude.)
My views on these things are something like:
* 5-HT2a: essential for psychedelic effects
* 5-HT2b: important for entactogenic effects---may "soften" or "warm" the psychedelic effect by enhancing endogenous serotonin release
* 5-HT2c: ????? (side-effects? anorexia?)
* 5-HT1a: dampens or amplifies psychedelic effects (depending on degree of effect of the partial agonist). May play a role in ego loss type effects???
* alpha and beta adrenergic receptors: affects degree of arousal or stimuation during the experience---possibly establishing a floor and/or ceiling of arousal that arises during experience
Most psychedelics people like to use have high affinity at 5-HT2a and 5-HT2b. A few (like LSD and mescaline) have high affinity at 5-HT1a. Most also have significant affinity for at least one adrenergic receptor. Some have moderate affinity at 5-ht2c. I should mention that LSD and presumably other lysergamides also have some affinity for dopamine receptors, but not really any of the common non-lysergamides.
I've never personally had ALD-52, so I haven't the slightest idea of it feels different from LSD.
Fun fact: the 5-HT2c receptor is encoded in the DNA of the X chromosome, which means heritable differences are sex linked.
My views on these things are something like:
* 5-HT2a: essential for psychedelic effects
* 5-HT2b: important for entactogenic effects---may "soften" or "warm" the psychedelic effect by enhancing endogenous serotonin release
* 5-HT2c: ????? (side-effects? anorexia?)
* 5-HT1a: dampens or amplifies psychedelic effects (depending on degree of effect of the partial agonist). May play a role in ego loss type effects???
* alpha and beta adrenergic receptors: affects degree of arousal or stimuation during the experience---possibly establishing a floor and/or ceiling of arousal that arises during experience
Most psychedelics people like to use have high affinity at 5-HT2a and 5-HT2b. A few (like LSD and mescaline) have high affinity at 5-HT1a. Most also have significant affinity for at least one adrenergic receptor. Some have moderate affinity at 5-ht2c. I should mention that LSD and presumably other lysergamides also have some affinity for dopamine receptors, but not really any of the common non-lysergamides.
I've never personally had ALD-52, so I haven't the slightest idea of it feels different from LSD.
Fun fact: the 5-HT2c receptor is encoded in the DNA of the X chromosome, which means heritable differences are sex linked.
